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The heavy thud of the ink stamp hitting the paper echoed like a gunshot in the small, concrete room.
Warden Thompson didn't look up. He just slid the file across the metal desk.
"You're done, Haynes. Get out."
Camille Haynes stood still. Her heart rate didn't spike. Her palms didn't sweat. Five years ago, she would have been trembling, tears streaming down her face, begging for someone to tell her this was a mistake.
Now, she just reached for the plastic bag Officer Grant held out.
It was light. Pathetically light. A tube of chapstick that had expired three years ago and a medical textbook with the spine broken in three places.
"Sign here," Grant said, bored.
Camille signed. Her handwriting had changed. It used to be loopy, girlish. Now it was sharp, jagged lines that looked like they could cut skin.
She walked toward the heavy steel door. The buzzer sounded, a long, angry drone that vibrated in her teeth. The door slid open.
Camille stepped out.
The sun hit her like a physical blow. She flinched, her arm coming up to shield her eyes. The air didn't smell like bleach and stale cabbage anymore. It smelled of dust and exhaust and something terrifyingly open.
She lowered her arm. She expected cameras. She expected the flash of bulbs that had blinded her five years ago when she was dragged away in handcuffs.
There was nothing.
Just an empty road and a single black stretch limousine idling on the shoulder.
The windows were tinted so dark they looked like oil slicks. The car sat there, ominous and silent. It looked like a hearse.
Camille adjusted the collar of her trench coat. It was the same one she had worn the day she was arrested. The hem was frayed, and the fabric was tight across her shoulders. She had been a waif then. Prison had stripped the fat and built muscle in its place.
She walked to the car.
The driver got out. He wore white gloves. He didn't look at her face. He opened the rear door and stared at the horizon, as if looking at her would contaminate him.
Camille ducked inside.
The air conditioning hit her instantly, freezing the sweat on her neck. The door thudded shut, sealing her in a leather-scented vacuum.
Across from her sat her mother, Victoria, and her sister, Mia.
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